yes
Iron(II) oxide (FeO) forms an ionic bond. Iron loses electrons to oxygen, resulting in the formation of Fe2+ and O2- ions which are held together by electrostatic forces.
FeO is an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they tend to form an ionic bond where Fe loses electrons to form Fe2+ cation and O gains electrons to form O2- anion.
FeO forms an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal, and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they typically form ionic bonds where the metal atom loses electrons to the non-metal atom. In FeO, iron loses 2 electrons to oxygen to form the Fe2+ cation and the O2- anion.
First of all 'FeO' is NOT an element. It is a compound composed of two elements. The elements being iron(Fe) and oxygen(O). Next, you appear to misunderstand between 'Ionic' and 'molecular'. Any substance is a composed of two or more atoms is a molecule. The method of combination of these atoms can be either 'Ionic' or 'covalent'. Iron(II) Oxide (FeO) is an ionic molecule (compound). Fe^(2+)(aq) + O^(2-)(aq) = FeO(s)
No, iron and oxygen typically do not form a covalent bond. Instead, they usually form an ionic bond in compounds such as iron oxide (Fe2O3) or iron(II) oxide (FeO).
Iron(II) oxide (FeO) forms an ionic bond. Iron loses electrons to oxygen, resulting in the formation of Fe2+ and O2- ions which are held together by electrostatic forces.
FeO is an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they tend to form an ionic bond where Fe loses electrons to form Fe2+ cation and O gains electrons to form O2- anion.
FeO forms an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal, and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they typically form ionic bonds where the metal atom loses electrons to the non-metal atom. In FeO, iron loses 2 electrons to oxygen to form the Fe2+ cation and the O2- anion.
First of all 'FeO' is NOT an element. It is a compound composed of two elements. The elements being iron(Fe) and oxygen(O). Next, you appear to misunderstand between 'Ionic' and 'molecular'. Any substance is a composed of two or more atoms is a molecule. The method of combination of these atoms can be either 'Ionic' or 'covalent'. Iron(II) Oxide (FeO) is an ionic molecule (compound). Fe^(2+)(aq) + O^(2-)(aq) = FeO(s)
No, iron and oxygen typically do not form a covalent bond. Instead, they usually form an ionic bond in compounds such as iron oxide (Fe2O3) or iron(II) oxide (FeO).
Ionic. This is the best decription of FeO, iron(II) oxide.
2 FeO
ionic bond
ferrous oxide -or- iron(II) oxide
Ionic bonds
This is an ionic bond.
FeO is Iron(II)oxide, archaically , Ferrous oxide. Do NOT confuse with Fe2O3, which is Iron(III)oxide ; Archaically Ferric oxide. The 'iron' atom is in different oxidation states for these two compounds. NB 'Fe' is the chemical symbol for 'Iron', and comes from Latin 'Ferrum' for iron.